Jones told The Register that attacks range from simply chopping through fiber-optic cables in an underground duct, to lifting the cover of an access chamber, pouring in petrol, and setting the whole lot alight.

The motives for these attacks are thought to be simply vandalism or people with a grudge against a particular provider, rather than being a case of network operators aiming to sabotage their rivals, Jones claimed.

“You find instances where a chamber containing equipment for multiple providers has been accessed, but only one provider has been attacked,” he said, adding that it could be ex-employees with a grudge and that some attacks have even been 5G protesters simply targeting any digital infrastructure.

14 points

fiber

Huh. It’s The Register, which is a British piece of media, with a London-based author writing about an event in the UK and they’re using the traditionally-American English spelling. Maybe the UK is going towards “fiber” rather than “fibre”.

hits Google N-grams

Ah hah. Yup, apparently it’s at about 50-50, but the majority in British English just switched to “fiber” within the last ten years.

https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=fiber%2Cfibre&year_start=1800&year_end=2019&corpus=en-GB-2019&smoothing=3

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3 points

Like all reasonable people interested in linguistics, I’m a descriptivist. However, something about the idea of language being adapted to cater to an algorithm turns my stomach.

I know it’s hypocritical. The Attention Economy shouldn’t be any less valid a linguistic influence than the Norman Conquests, just because they occurred a millennium ago.

I genuinely think we’re lucky in Britain that the soft power we have (for the time being) has prevented our culture being entirely supplanted by the United States.

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12 points

There’s a few things going on here, in addition to a general Americanisation.

Firstly El Reg obviously wants to attract those sweet sweet American clicks, so they could well have American English as their style guide (I’m a bit doubtful, I bet they use colour).

Secondly there’s long been a tendency to use American spelling in IT journalism for technical objects. So “optical fiber” but “dietary fibre”; “floppy disk”, but djs “spin discs”. “TV programme”, but “computer program”.

It’s been that ways since at least the 80s, quite possibly earlier.

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6 points

(I’m a bit doubtful, I bet they use colour).

goes to investigate

Google search for: site:theregister.com color:

About 41,100 results (0.29 seconds)

Google search for: site:theregister.com colour:

About 88,400 results (0.20 seconds)

You appear to be correct.

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4 points

Interestingly, quite a few of the ‘colors’ are from articles written by US editors/correspondents - so it looks like the Reg doesn’t havw a consistency-obsessed subs desk and will let the journalist go with whatever they are most comfortable with.

Quite a few of the others are forum comments.

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1 point
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2 points

Disk vs disc I believe is down to the type of medium, magnetic disk vs optical disc

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6 points

It’s the best characteristic of English, I think. It’s alive, it changes and we do very little to prevent that from happening (unlike French or German).

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1 point

You do so little that the spelling and phonetics of words have been drifting apart for couple centuries and nobody cares. Then people who only speak English think every language is as a Frankenstein monster as much as English.

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-1 points

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The group, led by Ogi and Vorboss, has written to Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Michelle Donelan asking for a review of the rules that safeguard networks kit.

This follows recent spate of attacks on optical fiber network infrastructure around the country which represent an emerging threat to public services and businesses, the group says.

Jones told The Register that attacks range from simply chopping through fiber-optic cables in an underground duct, to lifting the cover of an access chamber, pouring in petrol, and setting the whole lot alight.

The motives for these attacks are thought to be simply vandalism or people with a grudge against a particular provider, rather than being a case of network operators aiming to sabotage their rivals, Jones claimed.

Ogi, which operates mostly in Wales, suffered an attack on its infrastructure in January in the Pembroke Dock area after which engineers had to effectively rebuild parts of a newly installed network covering 600m (nearly 2,000 feet) across several sites in the town, according to ISP Review.

"As the largest network in the UK with the highest regulated service standards to uphold, nobody suffers more from poor ‘whereabouts’ compliance than Openreach and no-one’s keener to improve it.


The original article contains 850 words, the summary contains 204 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

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